Album info

Album-Release:
2024

HRA-Release:
26.04.2024

Label: Orchid Classics

Genre: Classical

Subgenre: Concertos

Artist: Jonathan Biss, Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra & David Afkham

Composer: Brett Dean (1961), Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827)

Album including Album cover

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  • Ludwig van Beethoven (1770 - 1827): Piano Concerto No. 5 in E-Flat Major, Op. 73 "Emperor":
  • 1 Beethoven: Piano Concerto No. 5 in E-Flat Major, Op. 73 "Emperor": I. Allegro (Live) 20:44
  • 2 Beethoven: Piano Concerto No. 5 in E-Flat Major, Op. 73 "Emperor": II. Adagio un poco mosso (Live) 08:06
  • 3 Beethoven: Piano Concerto No. 5 in E-Flat Major, Op. 73 "Emperor": III. Rondo. Allegro (Live) 10:28
  • Brett Dean (b. 1961): Piano Concert "Gneixendorf Music - A Winter Journey":
  • 4 Dean: Piano Concert "Gneixendorf Music - A Winter Journey": I. Gneixendorf? That Sounds Like a Breaking Axle! (Live) 14:00
  • 5 Dean: Piano Concert "Gneixendorf Music - A Winter Journey": II. Difficult Decisions. Must It Be? (Live) 08:23
  • 6 Dean: Piano Concert "Gneixendorf Music - A Winter Journey": III. Applause, Friends, the Comedy Is Over (Live) 02:57
  • Total Runtime 01:04:38

Info for Beethoven-5, Vol. 1 (Live)



In 2015, pianist Jonathan Biss initiated the Beethoven / 5 Commissioning Project with the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra and more than fifteen other orchestras, resulting in a groundbreaking nine-year collaboration. The project produced five extraordinary new piano works by some of today's most important composers, responding to Beethoven's own concertos. The first volume, recorded with the Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra, features Beethoven's 'Emperor Concerto' and Brett Dean's companion piece 'Gneixendorfer Music, A Winter's Journey'.

Biss comments: "Watching Brett Dean tackle Beethoven's Fifth Piano Concerto was not only exhilarating but also uplifting. Gneixendorfer's music is a rushing and moving essay on Beethoven's vitality and fragility, and it takes his Fifth Piano Concerto as its starting point, quoting it liberally, albeit always through a distorting lens, and always with Dean's own distinctive voice to the fore. It is a work of astonishing creativity whose subject is Beethoven's astonishing creativity."

The Beethoven / 5 project explores Beethoven's impact in depth, foregrounding his revolutionary and vital contributions and bringing his music to centre stage across different traditions and voices.

Jonathan Biss, piano
Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra
David Afkham, conductor



Jonathan Biss
was born in 1980; his professional debut preceded this event by several months, when he performed, prenatally, the Mozart A Major Violin Concerto at Carnegie Hall, with the Cleveland Orchestra under the direction of Lorin Maazel.1 Subsequent violin performances have shown greater independence, though they have also been more likely to send listeners running in the opposite direction, wildly searching for Ear, Nose and Throat specialists, and - at times - strychnine.

Although the highlight of his career as a violinist took place when he was a fetus, Mr. Biss’s childhood was nonetheless saturated with music. With both of his parents playing the violin, and his older brother Daniel taking up the piano, he remembers music emanating from nearly every room in the house, including bathrooms, which, while modest in their decor, were valued for their acoustical properties.2

Given this background, Mr. Biss’s commencement of piano studies at the age of six might seem like a defensive move, but it was in fact entirely offensive: while this adjective may in fact describe the sounds he produced when he began studying, it is simply meant to convey that the motivation to play the piano was entirely his own - his parents had no extra bathrooms to practice in, after all, and were not keen to build an outhouse. Mr. Biss’s enthusiasm manifested itself from the very beginning of his studies, far exceeding his six year-old physical and intellectual capacities.3

This enthusiasm (or, if you take the word of Mr. Biss’s friends and associates, “obsessiveness” and “neurosis”) remains today, as does the feeling that doing justice to great music is an ever unattainable goal.4 While this doesn’t necessarily make life easy, it is Mr. Biss’s deeply held sentiment that any other approach would be unthinkable. Or, in his own words, “if I ever stop finding music challenging and life-altering, I’ll quit and become an accountant5.”

Growing up in Bloomington, Indiana, Mr. Biss was blessed with excellent teachers, starting with Karen Taylor - who as his first instructor, helped him give what is still regarded as the definitive performance of the “Middle C Piece,” - and continuing with Evelyne Brancart, who for six years was an invaluable source of information while Mr. Biss weathered what might best be termed an awkward adolescence. At the age of 17, Mr. Biss went to the Curtis Institute of Music, where he studied with Leon Fleisher, which proved a phenomenal learning experience whenever Mr. Biss stopped looking under the piano to see if magic or pharmaceuticals were involved in the production of Mr. Fleisher’s surreally beautiful sound.

Around the same time, Mr. Biss began concertizing, which has led to his present activities, described in other pages of this site. Highlights have included post-natal reengagements with Ms. Fried (with Mr. Biss a less reticent partner this time around), Maestro Maazel, and in November 2007, the Cleveland Orchestra.

While Mr. Biss’s life in music provides him with tremendous satisfaction, playing music remains ever a struggle. He regards it as a pleasure and privilege to live this struggle, and to share its results with other people.

This album contains no booklet.

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